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The runspec console chat-room server — a dumb message pipe with presence: console SSH-tunnel door + email-verify browser web door

Project description

runspec-room

The server behind the runspec-console chat room — a dumb message pipe with presence. It holds, per room, the connected participants, their live presence, and a durable transcript, and it does three things: accept connections, stamp + persist each inbound message, and broadcast every message / presence change to everyone else in the room. All the intelligence stays in the consoles — the server never runs anything.

See docs/design/console-room-server.md for the full design and decisions.

Status — complete server (S1–S3)

Two front doors, one process:

  • Console door — an NDJSON listener on localhost, which each runspec-console reaches by opening a direct-tcpip channel over its existing pooled SSH connection. A console's right to be in the room is its SSH access — no new exposed port, no second credential.
  • Browser door — a WebSocket endpoint (/ws) plus a small vanilla static frontend (transcript / composer / presence) with recent-history backscroll for people. Authenticated via OIDC (no passwords stored); identity comes from the signed-cookie session. TLS is self-terminated or left to a reverse proxy.

Run it

pip install -e .

# Full server (browser + console doors):
console-room --port 8080 --ndjson-port 8765 --db ./console_room.db

# Console door only (no web deps needed):
console-room --ndjson-only --ndjson-port 8765 --db ./console_room.db

The console door stays on localhost — consoles tunnel in. Open the browser door at the web port.

Enabling login (email link) + TLS

Without a session secret the browser door runs in dev mode — unauthenticated, identity from a ?user= join form (a warning is logged; don't expose it). With one, the door runs email-verify login: an internal employee verifies a company email (the link is sent by a connected console as the queue mailbox), and the signed session that grants access expires after session_ttl (default 24h) — they log back in the same way (the email is remembered in a cookie, so a return visit is one click). See docs/design/email-queue-signup.md.

export CONSOLE_ROOM_SESSION_SECRET="$(openssl rand -hex 32)"  # signs cookie + token
export CONSOLE_ROOM_PUBLIC_URL="https://room.example.com"     # login links point here
export CONSOLE_ROOM_MAILBOX="helpdesk@corp.com"               # one email = one room
# export CONSOLE_ROOM_SESSION_TTL=86400   # access lifetime before re-login (s)
# export CONSOLE_ROOM_VERIFY_TTL=1800     # login-link lifetime (s)
# Extra login domains besides the mailbox's own (always allowed) — for a company
# whose people sit on a few domain variants behind one monitored mailbox:
# export CONSOLE_ROOM_ALLOWED_DOMAINS="company1.com,company1.company2.com"

console-room --host 0.0.0.0 --port 443 \
  --tls-cert /etc/ssl/room.crt --tls-key /etc/ssl/room.key

uvicorn is proxy-header-aware (X-Forwarded-Proto), so you can drop --tls-* and let nginx/Caddy terminate TLS instead.

Config file (deploy from one file)

Everything above can live in a TOML file instead — handy for Ansible. Point at it with --config (or CONSOLE_ROOM_CONFIG, or drop a console_room.toml in the working dir). Precedence is defaults < config file < env var < CLI flag, so a flag or env var always overrides the file. The session secret can be a command (its stdout is the secret) so it never sits in the committed file, and [[teams]] is the authoritative team list, synced into the room on every boot — a fleet of rooms deploying the same file converges on the same teams.

[server]
host = "0.0.0.0"
port = 443
ndjson_host = "127.0.0.1"
ndjson_port = 8765
public_url = "https://room.example.com"   # required for email login
mailbox = "helpdesk@corp.com"             # one email = one room
db = "/var/lib/runspec-room/console_room.db"
tls_cert = "/etc/ssl/room/fullchain.pem"  # omit if a proxy terminates TLS
tls_key  = "/etc/ssl/room/privkey.pem"
assignment_timeout = 300

[auth]
# Either a literal secret, or a command whose stdout is the secret (preferred):
session_secret_command = "cat /run/secrets/room_session_secret"
# session_secret = "…"
verify_ttl  = 1800     # login-link lifetime (s)
session_ttl = 86400    # access lifetime before re-login (s) — 24h
# Extra login domains beyond the mailbox's own (always allowed). A TOML array or a
# comma/space-separated string; a leading "@" is optional. The mailbox stays the
# single monitored connector — this only widens who may log in on the portal.
# allowed_domains = ["company1.com", "company1.company2.com"]

[[teams]]
name = "Engineering"
[[teams]]
name = "Finance"
console-room --config /etc/runspec-room/console_room.toml

Run it as a service (no root)

A systemd user unit ships in deploy/console-room.service — it runs as you, no root, surviving logout via enable-linger.

pip install --user runspec-room          # or into a venv (then fix ExecStart)

mkdir -p ~/.config/systemd/user
cp deploy/console-room.service ~/.config/systemd/user/

# config (optional) — the server reads CONSOLE_ROOM_* env (or a --config TOML):
mkdir -p ~/.config/console-room
cat > ~/.config/console-room/console-room.env <<'EOF'
CONSOLE_ROOM_NDJSON_PORT=8765
CONSOLE_ROOM_PORT=8090
# CONSOLE_ROOM_HOST=0.0.0.0          # expose the browser door (then set a session secret!)
# CONSOLE_ROOM_SESSION_SECRET=...    # enables email login
# CONSOLE_ROOM_CONFIG=/etc/runspec-room/console_room.toml   # or a config file
EOF

systemctl --user daemon-reload
systemctl --user enable --now console-room
loginctl enable-linger "$USER"           # keep it running after you log out

systemctl --user status console-room
journalctl --user -u console-room -f     # logs

Edit ExecStart in the unit if console-room isn't at ~/.local/bin/console-room (e.g. a venv). To serve only the console NDJSON door, append --ndjson-only to ExecStart.

Wire protocol (NDJSON, one JSON object per line)

Console → server:

{"type":"hello",   "room":"ops", "user":"alice@web01"}
{"type":"message", "room":"ops", "text":"rolling out"}
{"type":"presence","room":"ops", "status":"available"}

The first frame must be hello — that's how a console declares its identity (the server can't see the OS user over the tunnel). The name is bound to the connection and stamped onto every later message; per-frame user fields are ignored, so a frame can't spoof a different sender.

Server → client:

{"type":"message", "room":"ops", "sender":"alice@web01", "text":"rolling out", "id":"…", "ts":0.0}
{"type":"presence","room":"ops", "user":"alice@web01", "status":"available"}

The server echoes a sender's own message back (with the assigned id/ts); a console drops its own echo so it never re-reacts to its own messages.

Browsers speak the same message / presence schema over the WebSocket — but their identity comes from the connection (the ?user=&room= query in dev, the OIDC session in S3), so they send no hello frame.

Develop

pip install -e ".[dev]"
pytest

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